Report: Israel warns 100,000 Gaza residents to move back from border

About 100,000 Gaza residents living in cities near the border with Israel were reportedly told Thursday to leave their homes ahead of anticipated military action by the Israeli army, according to Israeli media reports.

Israeli ministers have repeatedly hinted at a possible ground offensive over the past three days of airstrikes on Gaza, with troops massing on the border. Israel’s Intelligence Minister Yuval Steinitz told Israel Radio on Thursday that the military “will have to take over Gaza temporarily, for a few weeks.” Israel has called up 20,000 reservists.

Israel’s military warned Gazans in Beit Lahia, Beit Hanoun and Abasan al-Saghira to flee, but residents are largely unable to leave the territory — though the border with Egypt was temporarily opened Thursday in order to let some injured people leave for treatment.

At least 88 people have been killed in three days of Israel’s latest offensive on the Gaza Strip, and more than 50 of them were civilians, according to Gaza medical officials. Hundreds more have been injured.

In Israel, there have been no reports of any deaths resulting from hundreds of rockets sent from Gaza in recent days.

UNICEF said Thursday that among the Palestinian fatalities were 19 children. It warned that airstrikes and rocket attacks would continue to threaten the lives of young Palestinians and Israelis and called on both sides of the conflict to show “maximum restraint.”

During a United Nations Security Council meeting held Thursday, a Palestinian envoy called on the body to “stop the carnage” in Gaza.

“Israel claims it is the only democracy in the Middle East, but it is attacking innocent civilians,” envoy Riyad Mansour said. “Israel is perpetrating war crimes and state terror against civilians in Gaza.”

Ron Prosor, Israel’s ambassador to the U.N., told the council that Hamas, which controls Gaza, is “intentionally and indiscriminately” threatening 3.5 million Israelis. “No nation, no people and no government could tolerate this,” he added.

U.N Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said Thursday that it was “unacceptable for citizens on both sides to permanently live in fear of the next aerial attack.”

He added that an Israeli ground offensive and “an all-out escalation” was preventable only if Hamas stops firing rockets and mortars into Israel.

Mustafa Barghouti, a member of the Palestine Liberation Organization and a Palestinian legislator, warned that a ground assault could amount to “the most bloody massacre ever in this region.”

In a conference call, he suggested that “thousands of lives” could be lost, “along with the potential imminent destruction of most of the infrastructure of Gaza.”

Family destroyed by airstrike

Earlier Thursday, an Israeli airstrike killed eight members of a family, including five children, in a predawn raid on Gaza, Palestinian officials said, while armed groups launched rockets at Tel Aviv and other cities from the occupied territory.

The Israeli military had no comment on the deadliest single attack on Gaza since it began its offensive Tuesday. The strike destroyed at least two homes in Khan Younis, located in southern Gaza. Israel has bombed more than 120 homes and several government buildings in Gaza, according to Palestinian officials.

A number of NGO and rights groups have raised alarm over the growing number of casualties, especially among children.

“Since 2000, more than 1,000 children have been killed as a result of repeated Israeli military offensives on Gaza,” said Brad Parker, international advocacy officer at Defense for Children International-Palestine. “The current regime of collective punishment implemented through an almost seven-year-old blockade, targeted assassinations and regular military offensives all but guarantees the situation for Gaza’s children will continue to deteriorate.”

Though Israel “disengaged” from the Gaza Strip in 2005, removing all settlements that were considered illegal under international law, the military remains in control of Gaza’s borders, airspace and sea — imposing a strict blockade on the territory.

Since the assault began, Israel said it has bombed more than 750 targets. It has targeted the homes of members of armed groups, which it describes as “command centers.” It blames Hamas for exposing civilians to the risk of airstrikes by operating in residential areas.

Sirens rang out in cities across Israel again Thursday as rockets were fired from Gaza.

At least two rockets fell in open areas in the Tel Aviv region, but no injuries were reported, the Palestinian news agency Maan reported. Another rocket exploded near a home in Netivot, and one woman reportedly suffered from shock.

The latest tensions follow an April agreement between Hamas and Fatah to form a unity government during peace talks, which stalled not long after they were restarted. In June, three Israeli teenagers went missing in the West Bank, and Israel blamed their abduction on Hamas — an allegation that Hamas has denied. Israel then launched a military crackdown on the occupied territory, arresting more than 500, including many Hamas members, and killing at least six Palestinians in clashes over the often-violent raids.

When the bodies of the three teens were found last week, anger boiled over in Israel and hard-liners were seen marching through the streets of Jerusalem chanting “Death to the Arabs” and assaulting random Palestinians. The night after the three boys’ funerals, Palestinian teenager Mohammed Abu Khdeir was kidnapped and burned alive. Six Israeli suspects were arrested and three reportedly confessed to the crime that set off massive street protests in occupied East Jerusalem.

At Abu Khdeir’s funeral in Shuafat, Jerusalem, on July 3, his 15-year-old cousin Tareq Abu Khdeir was brutally beaten by masked Israeli security forces, a crime that was captured on video. The boy was then arrested. Israeli authorities at the Justice Ministry Police Investigations Department have claimed that Tareq was involved in a “riot” and was throwing stones.

The department said in a statement Thursday that it has “decided to consider” bringing criminal charges against the police officers suspected of severe violent crimes committed while the minor was handcuffed.